Eating in China
How dining works — from QR menu ordering to dietary needs, common dishes, and how to pay the bill without fighting for it.
Chinese dining culture can feel overwhelming at first — QR codes instead of menus, a dozen dishes arriving at once, and the bill becoming a diplomatic negotiation. Once you understand the rhythm, it is one of the most rewarding parts of travel here.
How ordering works
Forget raising your hand for the waiter.
📱 QR code ordering
At most casual and mid-range restaurants, there are no paper menus. Every table has a QR code sticker. Here is the drill:
- 1Open WeChat or Alipay and scan the QR code on the table
- 2A digital menu opens — browse by category with photos and prices
- 3Tap the items you want, then confirm your order
- 4When you are done, pay directly through WeChat / Alipay — no need to call the waiter
Common dishes to know
Order with confidence. These are staples you will see across the country.
Dietary needs & allergies
China's food culture is group-oriented, but accommodation is possible.
🥦 Vegetarian & vegan
Chinese vegetarianism (素食 · sù shí) is understood but usually means Buddhist-style — no meat, but may include eggs and dairy. Typical pitfalls:
- ✗ "Vegetable" dishes often have minced pork or lard. Say "Bu yao rou" (不要肉 — no meat) when ordering.
- ✓ Buddhist vegetarian restaurants (素菜馆) are common in larger cities and are reliably vegan-friendly.
- ✓ Use Dianping to search for "素食" near you — maps show photos of the food so you know what to expect.
🥩 Halal
China has a large Muslim population. Look for restaurants with green signs and Arabic script — these are 清真 (qīng zhēn) halal restaurants. They are especially common in Xi'an, Lanzhou, Beijing (Niujie area), and Xinjiang restaurants across the country.
⚠️ Allergies & sensitivities
- ✗ MSG (味精 · wèi jīng): Ubiquitous in Chinese cooking. Say "Bu yao wei jing" — most restaurants will accommodate.
- ✗ Peanut oil: Most stir-fries use peanut oil. If allergic, specify "Hua sheng you guo min" (花生油过敏).
- ✗ Gluten / dairy: Wheat-based soy sauce is everywhere. Cheese is rare outside Western restaurants. Carry an allergy card in Chinese.
- ✓ Carry a card: Print or save a photo of your allergy written in Chinese (and severity). Show it to the waiter.
| Allergy | Chinese | Pinyin |
|---|---|---|
| Peanut | 花生过敏 | huā shēng guò mǐn |
| Shellfish | 海鲜过敏 | hǎi xiān guò mǐn |
| Dairy / Milk | 牛奶过敏 | niú nǎi guò mǐn |
| Gluten / Flour | 面筋过敏 | miàn jīn guò mǐn |
| Soy | 大豆过敏 | dà dòu guò mǐn |
| Egg | 鸡蛋过敏 | jī dàn guò mǐn |
| No MSG | 不要味精 | bù yào wèi jīng |
Dining etiquette & paying
A few customs go a long way.
🍽️ The unwritten rules
- ✓ Wait for the host to start — Usually the oldest or most senior person picks up chopsticks first.
- ✓ Do not stick chopsticks upright in rice — It resembles incense sticks at a funeral. Rest them on the chopstick rest.
- ✓ Sharing is standard — Dishes arrive for the whole table. Use the serving spoon if provided, or the opposite end of your chopsticks.
- ✓ Tea is free — Most restaurants serve complimentary tea (茶). You usually do not have to order it.
- ✓ Tipping is not required — Do not tip in casual restaurants. In high-end places, a 10–15% service charge is already included.
🧧 The bill fight
In China, splitting the bill is less common than fighting for it. Friends and colleagues will physically compete to pay the bill — this is a sign of generosity, not awkwardness. As a foreigner you are unlikely to win this fight. The easiest response: offer once, thank them sincerely, and treat them next time. If you are the host, slip away to pay at the counter before the meal ends.
Ordering food delivery
When you would rather eat at the hotel.
🛵 Meituan (美团)
- 1Download Meituan from your App Store (iOS/Android)
- 2Allow location access so it shows nearby restaurants
- 3Browse by category or search directly: 披萨 (pizza), 汉堡 (burger), 沙拉 (salad)
- 4Tap on dishes to add them to your cart. Photos are reliable — what you see is close to what arrives.
- 5Enter your delivery address — many hotels have a standard address card at reception. Or use pin-drop.
- 6Pay with WeChat Pay or Alipay. Estimated delivery time: usually 25–40 min.
- 7The rider will call when they arrive. Say "Fang zai qiantai" (放在前台 — leave it at reception) for contactless delivery.
🥡 Ele.me (饿了么)
Same flow as Meituan, sometimes cheaper. Owned by Alibaba, slightly stronger in southern cities. Good for late-night orders — many restaurants deliver until 2am.
Street food: what to eat, what to skip
The rule is simple: eat where the queue is.
👑 The golden rule
Look for stall queues. If locals queue, the turnover is fast and the food is fresh. Avoid stalls with pre-cooked food sitting out. Night markets (夜市 · yè shì) are the best bet — they are regulated, busy, and everything is cooked to order.
👍 What to try (low risk)
- ✓ Jianbing (煎饼 · jiān bing): Made-to-order savoury crêpes with egg, crispy wonton skin, and hoisin — cooked right in front of you.
- ✓ Barbecue skewers (烧烤 · shāo kǎo): Lamb skewers grilled to order, especially from Xinjiang-style stalls.
- ✓ Tanghulu (糖葫芦 · táng hú lu): Candied fruit on a stick — hawthorn or strawberry. Shelf-stable, zero risk.
- ✓ Baked sweet potatoes (烤红薯 · kǎo hóng shǔ): Sold from metal drums in winter. The cooking heat kills everything.
👀 What to approach carefully
- ✗ Raw or cold seafood: Boiled shellfish sitting at room temperature is a no.
- ✗ Unbottled drinks from stalls: Stick to sealed bottles or hot tea.
- ✗ Cut fruit from street vendors: Unknown how long it has been sitting — buy whole fruit and peel it yourself.
Chinese breakfast: a survival guide
The most underrated meal in China.
| Item | Chinese | What it is | Find it at |
|---|---|---|---|
| Soy milk + fried dough | 豆浆油条 · dòu jiāng yóu tiáo | Savory soy milk with crispy crullers for dipping. The classic duo. | Street stalls, breakfast shops (7–9am) |
| Steamed buns | 包子 · bāo zi | Filled buns: pork, vegetable, red bean. Grab and go. | Everywhere, all day |
| Congee | 粥/稀饭 · zhōu / xī fàn | Rice porridge with pickled vegetables, century egg or shredded pork. | Breakfast shops, hotel buffets |
| Tea eggs | 茶叶蛋 · chá yè dàn | Hard-boiled eggs simmered in tea and soy sauce. Marbled and savoury. | Convenience stores (FamilyMart, 7-Eleven) |
| Scallion pancake | 葱油饼 · cōng yóu bǐng | Flaky, layered flatbread with scallions. Greasy and glorious. | Street stalls |
Finding great restaurants
Dianping is China's Yelp — learn to read its signals.
⭐ Dianping scores, decoded
- ★ Score 4.5+: Exceptional, usually worth a detour.
- ★ Score 4.0–4.5: Solid, reliable choice.
- ★ Score 3.5–4.0: Average, fine for a quick meal.
- ✗ Below 3.5: Avoid unless it is a specific local favourite with loyal fans.
Beyond the star rating, look at the number of reviews (>500 is reliable), recent reviews (last 3 months), and photo count (>100 photos means it is busy). A new restaurant with a 4.8 is riskier than a 12-year-old place with a 4.0.
Need to say it in Chinese? → Chinese To-Go Cards
How to pay at restaurants → WeChat Pay & Alipay Guide